IT appears as though Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson has been caught out telling the truth. That is, as we know from past episodes, a sackable offence in any Tory Cabinet.
He was secretly recorded addressing the Conservative Way Forward group, accusing the Treasury of being at “the heart of Remain.”
Not surprisingly, Chancellor Philip Hammond has defended his department, boasting that he and his team have been taking a “collaborative approach” towards EU exit negotiations rather than a “confrontational” one.
US tariffs have had Von der Leyen bowing in submission, while comments from the former European Central Bank leader call for more European political integration and less individual state sovereignty. All this adds up to more pain and austerity ahead, argues NICK WRIGHT
SOLOMON HUGHES asks whether Labour ‘engaging with decision-makers’ with scandalous records of fleecing the public is really in our interests
Just as the Chilcot inquiry eventually exposed government failings over the Iraq war, a full independent investigation into British complicity in Israeli war crimes has become inevitable — despite official obstruction, writes JEREMY CORBYN MP


